https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...26249a49_b.jpg
The Morning After by tuco, on Flickr
C3, Sekor 65/3.5, 400TMY, D-23
Printable View
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...26249a49_b.jpg
The Morning After by tuco, on Flickr
C3, Sekor 65/3.5, 400TMY, D-23
It was the paper.... i can get close with Ilford Warmtone....but i'm about to print it on Ilford Art 300. The paper is unforunately long gone... i have a little Fortezo graded left.
Greg Y, Too bad the Polywarmtone is not longer available. Have seen prints on it that look like nothing available today. Another casualty of banning specific chemicals or compounds.
For some reason, Jekyll Island on the GA coast always has lots of fairly large jellyfish washed up on shore. Here's one at sunset:
https://blogger.googleusercontent.co..._R4juOnJf=s700
Thanks Kevin! I always like to take images that I can connect some history to.
Here's one more from the same place:
https://blogger.googleusercontent.co...vlbCBQluQ=s700
And, something different - I found this sunken sailboat on the coast of Biloxi. I was never able to get out there at low-tide, but maybe it'll be there still next visit. It was probably dredged up by the last hurricane, and will be similarly taken back by the sea in the next season or two.
Same camera but with a 150mm, but cropped 4:5
https://blogger.googleusercontent.co...KcqoEYfRy=s700
PS: one of my favorite things as a child visiting the coast of Mississippi was the S.S. Camille, a tugboat so named after the great 1969 hurricane that deposited it on shore (there was a souvenir shop next door that I visited often). Hurricane Katrina destroyed it and it was demolished a couple years later. Old sunken/rusting boats have a special feeling to me.
Excellent, I know the Le Moyne Bros. pretty intimately--very much the OG's of French Louisiana ;):
http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-1102
FWIW, if you're kicking around a bit west, the state park at old Fort Toulouse (most often known in the records as "Alabama Fort") is very much worth exploring there at the confluence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers--very much the heart of the Upper Creeks, and thus for a century very much on the mind of men from Savannah and Charleston (not to mention Whitehall and Versailles:))
Oh, near Montgomery - I'll have to remember that. There's a few places I'd like to look into more there.